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Can Video On Demand Save IPTV? VoD Economics, Global Forecasts, and the Case for IPTV VoD

Published by: Pyramid Research

Published: Jun. 1, 2007 - 66 Pages


Table of Contents


Acronyms and abbreviations



Companies mentioned in this report



Executive summary



Introduction



Section 1: VoD evolution, platforms, and economics

1.1 From PPV to SVoD and interactive TV

VoD: all about convenience and choice

How DVRs are changing the VoD game

The next phase: interactive TV

Case study: Time Warner Cable: a frontrunner in VoD and ITV

1.2 How VoD works, and how much it costs

The technical picture: VoD architecture

Bandwidth requirements and cost dynamics per VoD stream

1.3 What’s holding VoD back: digital networks, content, broadband

1.4 Why we think IPTV VoD can be transformational

The cable approach: network VoD

The satellite approach: near-VoD and DVR-based VoD

Why IPTV needs VoD: driving differentiation

How telcos position VoD: some examples



Section 2: Telcos, IPTV, and the case for VoD

2.1 The emerging telco business model: bundles and video transformation

2.2 Making money from VoD: the case for lower churn and higher ARPU

Why VoD is good for churn

VoD, pay TV customer growth, and opportunities for up-sell

Incremental revenue from VoD usage lifts ARPU levels

More VoD revenue potential: advertising



Section 3: Breaking down IPTV VoD business models

3.1 IPTV VoD models are less attractive for now, but lucrative models will come later

Why IPTV VoD is not attractive in the medium term

Two stages to more lucrative VoD models

3.2 Why VoD-only IPTV business models are difficult to pull off

3.3 What works: successful packaging strategies for VoD

FoD: questionable economics

Toward subscription-based VoD

Case study: PCCW—from a-la-carte to subscriptions



Section 4: IPTV VoD content models

4.1 Content: the lifeblood of VoD

Finding content that sells

Case study: Verizon moves into local-content programming

The long tail conundrum

The TV-on-demand evolution

4.2 VoD Content sourcing models: Exclusivity is rare, so IPTV operators are looking to create content

Case study: France Telecom becomes a movie producer

4.3 VoD content pricing schemes: looking for margins

The studio challenge and why IPTV VoD is not on top of the list

The challenge of volume guarantees

Avoiding napsterization



Section 5: IPTV VoD forecasts

5.1 Methodology

5.2 How big is the IPTV VoD addressable market?

5.3 IPTV VoD unit sales and revenue



APPENDIX

IPTV Architecture Primer

The head-end

Transport

The set-top box

Abstract

Internet Protocol television (IPTV) is rapidly emerging as a new TV platform. Delivered over broadband, it promises to reenergize the telco business model and disrupt the traditional TV business. The technology leverages the flexibility and scalability of IP to transform the television experience by providing access to more content—content that is superior in quality and can be more personalized and interactive than traditional broadcast TV. Within this context, video on demand (VoD), by enabling further service differentiation, is becoming a key component of the IPTV proposition.

IPTV and VoD services are as uncertain as they are tantalizing, however. The TV business is complex and largely new territory for telcos; the jury is still out on the commercial viability of IPTV and VoD services.

Pyramid Research’s new report—Can Video on Demand Save IPTV? VoD Economics, Global Forecasts, and the Case for IPTV VoD—takes a long, hard look at the VoD business model for IPTV operators, analyzing its value proposition, investment requirements, content dynamics, and overall market opportunity to assess whether telcos should take on the challenge or make do with pay-TV alone.

In Section 1, Pyramid Research reviews the global evolution of VoD services, platforms, and deployment economics. Section 2 includes an analysis of the new telco business model and the VoD value proposition for IPTV players. In Section 3, Pyramid Research examines the IPTV VoD business models of today and how and why they will change over time. VoD thrives on compelling content, but IPTV operators are quickly finding out that content acquisition is more time-consuming and expensive than envisioned. Section 4 delves into VoD content dynamics, providing insights into successful VoD content strategies and best practices from the perspectives of IPTV operators and content providers. Finally, in Section 5, Pyramid Research projects VoD transactions and revenues over IPTV networks, by region. Included in this report are also four case studies of operators that provide VoD services:

  • France Telecom, France
  • PCCW, Hong Kong
  • Time Warner Cable, USA
  • Verizon Communications, USA

Key Objectives

  • Can VoD save IPTV?
  • How will the VoD business model evolve on IPTV platforms?
  • Which IPTV VoD packaging strategy will come out on top?
  • What type of content is necessary to make VoD work?
  • How much does IPTV VoD cost?
  • What is the IPTV VoD opportunity?



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